The original editor was Albert Barnes- legend has it that Desperate Dan's chin was based on Albert's own chin. He was succeeded by Dave Torrie in 1980, before Dave went to edit The Beezer when he was in turn succeeded by current editor Maurice Heggie.
There have been several long-running strips over the years. The longest running strip in The Dandy is Desperate Dan who has been in all issues since the first one in 1937, bar a brief period in 1997 where he 'left' The Dandy, only to return for the comic's 60th anniversary issue in that year. Korky the Cat also featured in the first issue, and despite being quietly dropped in January 2005, he returned in November and still makes regular appearances in The Dandy today.
Nutty merged with The Dandy in 1985, followed by Hoot in 1986.
An 8 foot bronze statue of Desperate Dan stands in the centre of his birthplace - Dundee.
A first issue of The Dandy, complete with free gift, sold for a record £20,350 on 7 September 2004; the highest price ever paid for a British comic at an auction.
Originally, Korky the Cat occupied the front cover, but Desperate Dan took over in 1984. Cuddles and Dimples also occupied the front page between 1999 - 2000, when Dan reclaimed his spot on the cover (most likely due to public demand). With the advent of the 2004 relaunch there is no longer a comic strip on the cover, just a picture (usually of Jak). Even through these image changes Desperate Dan and Korky have remained in the comic.
This article is licensed under the GNU Free Documentation License.
It uses material from the
"The Dandy".
Home Page • arts • business • computers • games • health • hospitals • home • kids & teens • news • physicians • recreation• reference • regional • science • shopping • society • sports • world